This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2747.1.2.2 Message Board Post: Thank You MJ Norton. I appreciate the specific dates. I notice Joseph b: 1894 and Mary b: 1899 aren't mentioned. I guess it's because they were born later. With appreciation. Jan
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2743.1.1.1 Message Board Post: I have an old map of Shenandoah Co. and it shows that it was formed from Frederick Co. I only know that my Holmes said that he was of "Shenandoah " which doesn't necessarily mean the town of Shenandoah don't you think? Therefore, I'm still sticking to Frederick co. Thanks. Jackie
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2686.46 Message Board Post: Will Book 12,183 dated 28 Oct 1824,6 Dec 1824 Eleanor McCoole (widow of John McCoole) They were married in the house of Owen Rogers in Hampshire Co. VA, marriage recorded in Hopwell Friends History, married 14 Mar 1771. She was the daugher of Henry & Mary Lewis. She named children & grandchildren in her will. Her two daughters who married Weaver, were disowned, marriage can be found in Vogt's marriage book. 1. named as son John McCoole, his wife Cassander. Their married in Vogt's book, her maiden name Dent 2. named as son Lewis McCoole 3. named as son-in-law John McHunter & her daughter Eleanor 4. named as son-in-law Wm. Chenoweth, daughter Ann 5. named as son-in-law John Weaver, daughter Martha 6. named as son-law Jacob Weaver, daughter Olivia 7. named as grandson John James McCoole (son of Lewis) 8. named as granddaughter Eleanor Darlington
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2686.45 Message Board Post: Will Book 12,120 dated 16 Aug 1824, probated 6 Sep 1824, named in his will. 1. his nephew James ASHDALE living in TN 2. his nephew John ASHDALE 3. his niece Sally WOODWARD 4. his niece Susan Ashdale 5. Hannah Ashdale (named as wife of said John) 6. James Ashdale (son of said John) 7. John Ashdale Jr. (no relationship given) 8. James Woodward (no relationship given) 9. Susan PETERS (no relationship given) 10. Betsey Woodward (no relationship given) 11. Luke & Wm. Woodward (no relationship given)
Hunter Bruback is among the many names signed on the mortar joints of my house, Gravel Springs Farm. The signatures date from 1836-into the early years of the 20thC. ~ "Dr. Hunter Bruback" [no date] ~ "E.M. Ponton - Bettie Pifer - Russell Sh[a]ff[er] - Hunter Bruback - Mar. 1900" [Bettie Pifer was the daughter of Geo. Washington Pifer, the the owner of the house.] I seem to recall a brief biographical description of Dr. Bruback in one of the county histories of Frederick or Shenandoah Counties --and possibly a mention that he lived for a time in Strasburg? R. Warnock Gravel Springs Farm 2074 South Pifer Road Star Tannery, Virginia 22654.2229 http://www.GravelSpringsFarm.com &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, 20 November, 2004 19:14 Subject: [VAFREDER] Re: Ada and Lela Brumback's brother Hunter info > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Classification: Query > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2747.1.2.1 > > Message Board Post: > > One more..... > > Frederick County Virginia Birth Records, 1855-96 > Name Birth Date Race Sex Father Mother > > HUNTER BRUMBACK 12 FEB 1875 W M ISAAC E.E. > > > ==== VAFREDER Mailing List ==== > FREDERICK COUNTY UNSUBSCRIPTION DIRECTIONS > [email protected] UNSUBSCRIBE (as subject) > [email protected] UNSUBSCRIBE (as subject) > >
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Reed Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2750 Message Board Post: For those who have unfortunately run into a genealogical "brick wall" concerning your Reed/Reid/Read/Riedt ancestor, science and technology has recently provided us with a very exciting and potent tool to aid us in our long-standing quest for identifying our ancestral heritage. To this end, the Reed Y-chromosome DNA Project was launched last year and is now up to twenty participants and counting. So if you, or a male relative of yours (father, husband, brother, cousin, etc.) have the surname of Reed (or any variant spelling), and descend from any of the Reed/Read/Reid/Riedt families of early Frederick Co., VA, then it might be something you’d want to take a look at. Results thus far in the ongoing project are posted at http://www.familytreedna.com/public/reed/. As a sidenote, for any potential participants who may be the least bit concerned about privacy-related issues, these are fully addressed within the links associated with the above web site. And since this international study only deals with a very tiny, and specific, segment of the entire DNA sequence, it can only be used to aid in scientifically confirming the degree of relatedness between the many Reed/Reid/Read, etc. study participants - merely to help us determine which participant we share a common Reed/Reid/Read, etc. ancestor with (if any), and estimate how many generations back this event likely occurred. In fact, this study has already allowed me to eliminate a couple of long-standing, potential Reed ancestors off of my own list, so that I am now able to focus on the remaining potential lines that I've assimilated in my many years of research to date. And obviously, as more and more study results (and hopefully matches, or near matches) come in from worldwide participants, our search can be even further narrowed, thus bringing us closer to scientifically identifying our "true" ancestral line, as well as their country of origin, etc., if we're fortunate. So, by all means, please participate if you can and see the above link for further details. A mere twelve (12) y-DNA marker test should be quite sufficient for now. Best wishes, Bob P.S. The aforementioned web site may also be referenced for a list of all "other" DNA -surname projects (hundreds) presently underway. Check it out; it'll be worth your while.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2747.1.2.1 Message Board Post: One more..... Frederick County Virginia Birth Records, 1855-96 Name Birth Date Race Sex Father Mother HUNTER BRUMBACK 12 FEB 1875 W M ISAAC E.E.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2747.1.2 Message Board Post: Here are the children listed in the records for Isaac & his wife of various spellings :-) Frederick County Virginia Birth Records, 1855-96 Name Birth Date Race Sex Father Mother MARTHA BRUMBACK 17 SEPT 1877 W F ISAAC UPHRASIA LELAH BRUMBACK 11 OCT 1879 W F ISAAC NEPHRAISA ADA BRUMBACK OCT 1880 W F ISAAC EUPHRAIM MAUD BRUMBACK 16 JAN 1884 W F ISAAC EPHRAIM MILTON BRUMBACK 21 JUN 1885 W M ISAAC EMPHRASIA ELLEN BRUMBACK 13 JAN 1887 W F ISAAC EMPHRONIA JESSIE BRUMBACK 29 MAY 1889 W F ISAAC R.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2749.1.1.1.1 Message Board Post: More info - Edward Luther Hodgson married Isabel Woodward. His parents were John Hodgson and Ann Mesner. Clifton Hodgson born 3 Sept 1874(Look for him in 1880 census) Anna L. Fant - dau of Enoch West Fant and Mary E. Rhodes Anna born about 1875 (try looking for her in 1880 census) Chaplier, b. 4. Nov. 1898 Winchester, died Dec. 1968, Maryland.(try looking for him in 1900 - 1910 - 1920 and 1930 census)
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2749.1.1.1 Message Board Post: All I found was that Edward and Anna had 3 sons, Chaplier, George, and Harry. This info was from database 7834, posted by someone whose address was >[email protected]<
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2749.1.1 Message Board Post: Looking for family of Edward Luther Hodgson,Winchester area around 1800s-1950s .Edward was magrastrate arond 1910. Other names. Clifton Hodgson Married Anna Fant in Shenandoah on May 20 1897. Any info would be helpful. I do know they are buried in the family cemetary in Winchester.
Hello, Re: What is the Northern Neck of Virginia? Just happened to find and save this the other day while researching many lines from this area in the 1600s. Sincerely, Bellinda Myrick-Barnett http://www.northernneck.com/history.htm The following is a "history" of the Northern Neck. Major parts of the following text are taken from books by Miriam Haynie (The Stronghold) and John C. Wilson (Virginia's Northern Neck, a pictorial history). Other parts of the following are written by the author, David Dammer. This work is a labor of love, dedicated to the land and the people of the Northern Neck, and for all to enjoy. It is not for sale or publication in any other media other than that in which it is presented in here. It is an effort to let the rest of the world know about our little corner of the earth, a corner that I am very proud to say that I am a part of now. I only wish I had been born and raised here, as I would have been able to enjoy this land for all my life. The Northern Neck is rich in history. Among other things it is the birthplace of presidents like George Washington and famous people such as Thomas Lee and Robert E. Lee. The history of the "Neck" runs deep in the history of the United States, even North Amercia. Before 1600, before the first English settlement, the Northern Neck was the land between the "River of Swans" to the north and the "Quick-Rising Water" to the South, two loosely translated Indian terms for the Potomac River and the Rappahannock River. To the east lies the Chesapeake Bay, otherwise known as the "Mother of Waters", the "Great Saltwater" or the "Great Shell-fish Bay", the largest estuary in North America. Captain John Smith visited this country in 1607. He was probably one of the area's first tourists. During his first visit he traveled the "Neck" somewhat against his will, as a captive of the Indian Chief Opechacanoough. He returned in 1608 to explore the Potomac and Rappahannock rivers and the rest of the bay region. He made his first map of the Chesapeake Bay region in 1612. But, I am ahead of myself here. Let's start back at the beginning, or as far back as we can go. As the seventeenth century dawned, the Indian land of Powhatan was on the brink of a most profound revolution, although its residents could hardly have known it. Generations before them had, perhaps, seen or heard of strange vessels appearing in the Chesapeake Bay. Jesuit priests had sailed up the York River in 1570-71, and French and Spanish explorers had been in the Bay area earlier in the sixteenth century. These sightings may have stirred some discussion and speculation among the Indians at the time, but their infrequency gave little indication of the swift and dramatic changes to come. Indians had lived in the Northern Neck area for at least ten thousand years. This inhabitation was primarily, if not entirely, nomadic, involving small groups of hunters and gatherers which roamed the land in search of food, camping at many of the same sites over and over again. With the introduction of agriculture, around 500 B.C., came villages of more permanence. Pottery developed then, made from the land's blue-gray clay, which was pounded into powder, mixed with water and crushed shell, then coiled and shaped. By 1600, villages were spread thinly over the terrain, carved from the woods on the waterfront. These isolated clearings were large enough for the Indians' homes (of boughs, covered with bark and woven mats) and their crops, which included corn, potatoes, pumpkins, onions, peas, beans, and tobacco. Berries and certain kinds of fruit were also on hand, while the harvest from the sea, of oysters and fish, had always been a staple of the Indian diet. So, too, was wild game, although much of the hunting was accomplished farther up the watershed, in the communal deer drives. Many villages were shut down at that time and reopened on the return, when spring planting was begun. While waiting for the first green corn harvest, the Indians would break into small groups, staying for several weeks at temporary riverfront encampments, where they lived off seafood and oysters roasted in shallow pits, into which the shells were returned. The midden found at some of these sites, according to archaeological work done along the Potomac River and elsewhere, has been dated between 6800 B.C. and A.D. 1600. By the end of that long period, Jamestown was just seven years in the future. The entire Bay area population was twenty thousand, according to Paul Wilstach, or about half of today's Northern Neck population alone. Capt. John Smith's maps, based on his 1607-09 explorations, show 161 villages among the thirty-two kingdoms that made up Powhatan's Confederation. Among those kingdoms were the Indians of the Pissaseck tribe near Leedstown; the Moraughtacunds near Morattico; the Cuttatawomen, on the Corotoman; the Wiccocomoco, on the Wicomico; the Cekacawon, on the Coan; and the Nominies near Nomini Bay. The emperor, from his York River base, had access to twenty-five hundred warriors, while each village in his domain had a local king or "werowance" (Wlstach). With Captain Smith came the Northern Neck's first recorded history. A revolutionary development in itself, this first chronicle of the land and its inhabitants was born from Smith's being a prisoner of Opechacanough in the Winter of 1607. He was paraded through Powhatan's [empire, including a stop with the Nominies on the Potomac. The following spring, after Pocahontas's famous intervention that reportedly saved his life, Captain Smith explored far up the Potomac, looking for a route to China, and in the fall of 1608 traveled up the Rappahannock. The notes of Captain Smith and his crew mention the varied and massive trees ("so lofty and erect") in the spacious virgin forest-trees that could provide planks two-and-a-half feet square and twenty yards long, or be fashioned into a forty-five-foot canoe capable of carrying forty men. The land was a mighty forest, towering and expansive, with "sweets and christall springs" and Indian settlements in its midst. On the water, fish were at times so abundant that Captain Smith's party, without nets, tried to catch them once with a frying pan. That didn't work, but they had more success when, during a low tide that trapped some fish in the marsh grasses, they speared them with their swords. The Indians harvested the fish with traps, or weirs. There were plenty to bring in: sturgeon, sheepshead, grampus, white salmon, sole, mullet, eel, perch, carp, blowfish, bass, and flounder, to name a few of the species. During spring migrations, the fish could virtually plug up the entranceways to some of the smaller estuaries. Crabs were large and plentiful, and so were the oyster beds, which were harvested with forked sticks. Flocks of ducks were reported to be seven miles long. Swans, cranes, geese, and herons were all in abundance, for nature itself was abundant, then. Other adventurers, traders, and interpreters soon followed, exploring the Northern Neck and the rest of Virginia's waterfront frontier. One, Henry Spelman, lived for some time with King Patowmeke's tribe farther up the Potomac. Samuel Argall, and then Henry Fleet-who became a trusted trader and interpreter-were others. But for about thirty years after Smith first sailed here from Jamestown, no settlers came. When the first ones did, John Mottrom is believed to have been the first to leave Maryland, sail the Potomac, and settle at the mouth of the Coan River. Other Kent Islanders, and Protestants and Royalists disenchanted with Catholic Maryland, came too, and for a few years the growing settlement at Coan prospered in peace. By 1646-47, when Mottrom represented Northumberland in the Virginia General Assembly, a tax had been levied on the new settlement, one of fifteen pounds of tobacco for every hundred acres and every cow over three years of age. In 1648 (even then, there could be no taxation without representation) the Chickacoan area and much, much more territory was officially designated the county of Northumberland, with the power to elect burge sses. William Presly of Northumberland House on Cod's Creek became the Northern Neck's first burgess. In the 1640s and 1650s the nature of life on the Northern Neck was swiftly changing. Indians sold or deeded their river lands to the white settlers. They were pushed inland, into the uncleared forest. In some instances, according to at least one account, they were starved into submission when access to the water and its resources was denied them. Pushed inland, they were also, in short order, pushed out of the area and virtually out of existence. Early plantations, meanwhile, began to dot the landscape, and county formation was rapid. Out of Northumberland, Lancaster County was created in 165152, and Westmoreland in 1653. From Lancaster came Old Rappahannock County in 1656, which in 1692 was divided to form present-day Richmond and Essex counties (and a bit more). Seventeenth-century courts were held at the homes of justices of the county court, on the shores of the Coan, the Corotoman, and Currioman Bay. Significant settlements were also being made. The great-grandfathers of three of America's greatest presidents settled in Westmoreland County during the mid1600s. Andrew Monroe patented land in what is now Westmoreland County in 1650; John Washington landed nearby in 1656-57 and was given land by his father-in-law, Col. Nathaniel Pope; and John Madison patented land near Pope's Clifts Plantation in 1658. By 1661 Washington and Monroe were serving on the vestry of Appomattox Church. John Carter had settled in Lancaster County at the other end of the Northern Neck by 1654. Others, including the Lee ancestors, moved in on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay and its estuaries. The Balls were soon established at Millenbeck, farther up the Rappahannock, and by the latter part of the century, nearby Chowning's Ferny was in operation across the river. Moore Fauntleroy was among those settling in the Richmond County area, at Naylois Hole, where court was held when that county was formed. What is perhaps the oldest home in Northumberland County still standing, Lynhams on Bluff Point Neck, was established in 1678, on land owned by John Lynum and his wife Jane. Meanwhile, patents of land were given to those who had transported persons to the area (the "headrights"); others apprenticed themselves to plantation owners in exchange for eventual land holdings and other property. Sheriffs, justices of the county courts, dispensed local justice, collected taxes, served as treasurers, and supervised elections. "Colonels" commanded the county militias, in which all free men served; the counties themselves were divided into military districts. Vast tracts of land were cleared for the cultivation of the money crop, tobacco. Indentured servants (and, by the end of the century, slaves), were imported to work the plantations. Within just two or three decades, settlements of some permanence and note had completely replaced the humble and unassuming Indian villages, and the way of life on the Northern Neck had been forever changed. Gone were one hundred centuries of prerecorded history. In its place were the foundations of a more immediate "golden age." Across the ocean, meanwhile, developments were taking place that would have a tremendous impact on the Northern Neck. In 1649 Charles I was executed, and Cromwell ascended to power. At the time, Charles II was in exile. In 1649 he made a grant of the Northern Neck territory to certain of his loyal subjects (much as the monarchy had earlier granted Pennsylvania to William Penn and Maryland to Lord Baltimore). Three years later, 100 men signed the Northumberland Oath-ninety-nine of them gathered at Chickacoan to do it-pledging support of an England "without Kings or House of Lordes," although privately, no doubt, many felt otherwise. When Charles 11 was restored to the throne in 1660, his land grant took effect, shakily at first, but clouding ownership of the newly settled territory nevertheless. During the next century, this Northern Neck Proprietary became a source of power, and huge land holdings were achieved by those who served as its agents, overseeing and collecting quitrents on the Proprietary-patented land. By the early 1700s there were two "kings" in the Northern Neck-Robert Carter (agent of the Proprietary for Lord Fairfax), and tobacco. The latter was both the major export to England and the legal tender of the colony. Life centered around its cultivation. Indian paths became tobacco rolling roads, so named because casks (or hogsheads) of the harvested crop were rolled along them to the warehouses, located at shipping ports. Early plantation homes gave way to mansions. They were centers of trade and commerce, of culture and power, and they were almost exclusively mansions that tobacco built. In the 1720s and 1730s they were beginning to emerge all through the Northern Neck. Among them were Lee Hall (before its enlargements), Cobb's Hall (replacing the first Cobb's), and Stratford Hall, all of them in the Lee family, and all built in the 1720s (in 1729, an older Lee home, Machotick-or Matholic-had burned). Sabine Hall, home of Landon Carter, and Nomini Hall, home of Councillor Robert Carter, were established in the 1730s (an older Carter home-the mansion house at Corotoman-had likewise burned in 1729). In a number of ways, the year 1732 marks the passing of the founding order and the emergence of a new one. In that year, King Carter died, and the church he paid to have built, Christ Church, was nearing completion. Also in 1732, two leaders of the movement for American independence were born in Westmoreland County: Richard Henry Lee at Stratford, and, just a few weeks later, George Washington at Pope's Creek Plantation. The Grounds entrance at Pope's Creek Plantation The Northern Neck was an exclusive land even then, cohesive and yet a land apart. Geography made it that way, and the Proprietary underscored it. In days where widows and widowers (of which there were many) quickly remarried, out of custom and necessity, the Northern Neck was further distinguished by the extensive intermarriages among the families of its great estates. George Washington's grandmother, for example, was married three times and died a widow. The land was bound together by such interrelationships: her daughter Mary Ball, the mother of George Washington, was born in Lancaster County, grew up in Northumberland, lived and was married in Westmoreland, and owned land in Richmond County. A new and golden age was in the making. Tobacco and trade, and the plantation and its people, would flourish here during the next fifty years. So, too, would the movement for American independence. More to come . . . © 1997 - 2000, Eagles Nest, Ltd. TM All Rights Reserved In a message dated 11/19/2004 11:35:19 AM Central Standard Time, [email protected] writes: This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: McKenney, Gregory, Donahue, Delano, English, Mahan, Brann, French, Connelly Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2146.1 Message Board Post: The counties now commonly known as the Northern Neck include Northumberland, Lancaster, Richmond, and Westmoreland. King George is also physically part of the Northern Neck (sometimes known as the gateway to the Northern Neck), but often is omitted when talking about the historical Northern Neck because it is relatively young compared to the other four (it was formed in 1720 from Richmond County). ==== VAFREDER Mailing List ==== FREDERICK COUNTY UNSUBSCRIPTION DIRECTIONS [email protected] UNSUBSCRIBE (as subject) [email protected] UNSUBSCRIBE (as subject)
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2749.1 Message Board Post: It would be helpful if you put in a time frame for these families, and any first names you might have. This would narrow down any search.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2748.1.2 Message Board Post: David Smith, thank you for the name of the book. Hope I can find a copy at the library. I appreciate your nice offer for a look-up but I have many family Funkhouser's who resided in Frederick County that I need to look up. Jan
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2747.1.1 Message Board Post: MJNorton, thank you so much for the information you provided and the trouble you went to. With appreciation. Jan
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2747.1 Message Board Post: Is this the correct family??? 1880 census 6 June This is how it is spelled in the index, but it could be Brumback when viewing the census. Also, Lila could be Lela. Henter could be Hunter. J.M.T. could be I.M.T. The spot for relation is empty for Martha & Lila/Lela. Says that Lela b. Oct and is 8/12 old. Making her born Oct 1879. J. M. T BRUMBACK Shawnee, Frederick, VA 34 <1846> Virginia Male Self doctor and farmer Martha BRUMBACK Shawnee, Frederick, VA 2 <1878> Virginia Female Other Eupharia BRUNBACK Shawnee, Frederick, VA 24 <1856> Virginia Female Wife Henter BRUNBACK Shawnee, Frederick, VA 24 <1856> Virginia Female Wife Lila BRUNBACK Shawnee, Frederick, VA 8M <1879> Virginia Female Other **************** 1910 census 5 May Shawnee, Frederick Co., VA Brumback, Isaac M., 63, married 31 years, farmer Ephanisia (?sp?) , 54, wife, birth to 10 children - 6 living Hunter McG., 26, son, widowed, physician Lela B., daughter, 30 Ada, daughter, 29 Hariman (?sp?) , son, 24, farm hand Jessie, daughter, 20 For Ada to be 30 on 5 May 1910, she would be born between May 5, 1881 and May 5, 1880. We know she wasn't born on yet on June 6, 1880, so born between June 6, 1880 and May 5, 1881. Since Lela was born Oct 1879, she would need to be born at least after July, 1880 (Oct plus 9 months), and probably early 1881. Assuming her age is correct on census. Only Lela listed with parents in 1920 census. 1930 census April 11, 1930 Same location as Isaac's farm Wright, Carl, 55, married 1st time age 35, b. MO, farmer Lela B, 50, married 1st time age 39 Leonard M., 10 Ruth E., 8 Edwards, Ella A., lodger, 74, single Baumbach, Euphansia, 74, widowed, (indexed as Euphemia) Cook, Eleanor, 22, lodger, single (ages at marriage mean Lela was not his first wife) I am not related and have no further info. Hope this is of some help in narrowing your search.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2748.1.1 Message Board Post: Iberian went out of business last year.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/gAC.2ACE/2748.1 Message Board Post: There is a recent publication compiled by Painter and McCabe, entitled "Index to Burials in Frederick Co., Va.". It is available from Iberian Publishing Co. I would be glad to do a look up for you.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Surnames: Hodgson/Fant Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2749 Message Board Post: Looking for info on the familys in the Winchetser area of Va.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/gAC.2ACE/2748 Message Board Post: Have any tombstone transcriptions for Frederick County, Va. been done? If so, where can they be located? Thank you. Jan